A4 Article in conference proceedings
Incorporating teacher-student dialogue into digital course material : Usage patterns and first experiences (2020)


Tirronen, V., Lappalainen, V., Isomöttönen, V., Lakanen, A.-J., Taipalus, T., Nieminen, P., & Ogbechie, A. (2020). Incorporating teacher-student dialogue into digital course material : Usage patterns and first experiences. In FIE 2020 : Proceedings of the 50th IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference. IEEE. Conference proceedings : Frontiers in Education Conference. https://doi.org/10.1109/FIE44824.2020.9274123


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsTirronen, Ville; Lappalainen, Vesa; Isomöttönen, Ville; Lakanen, Antti-Jussi; Taipalus, Toni; Nieminen, Paavo; Ogbechie, Anthony

Parent publicationFIE 2020 : Proceedings of the 50th IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference

Conference:

  • Frontiers in Education Conference

Place and date of conferenceUppsala, Sweden21.-24.10.2020

ISBN978-1-7281-8962-8

eISBN9781728189611

Journal or seriesConference proceedings : Frontiers in Education Conference

ISSN1539-4565

eISSN2377-634X

Publication year2020

PublisherIEEE

Publication countryUnited States

Publication languageEnglish

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1109/FIE44824.2020.9274123

Publication open accessOther way freely accessible online

Publication channel open access

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/73098

Web address where publication is availablehttps://www.fie2020.org/abstracts-and-papers/


Abstract

This work-in-progress research investigates teacher-student communication via Learning Management Systems (LMS) in highly populated courses. An LMS called TIM (The Interactive Material) includes a specific commenting technology that attempts to make teacher-student dialog effortless. The research goal is to explore students’ willingness to use the technology and identify patterns of usage. To these ends, a survey with both Likert and open-ended questions was issued to CS1 and CS2 students. A favorable student evaluation was observed while several critical viewpoints that inform technology development were revealed. We noticed that besides appreciating the possibility of making comments, many students found benefit from peripheral participation without being active in commenting themselves. Informal communication appared to be preferred, and the commenting technology was considered second to best channel in this regard, following face-to-face interaction. The results are discussed in the light of Transactional Distance Theory and related literature to inform basic research.


Keywordsvirtual learning environmentseducational technologydistance studiesinteraction

Free keywordslearning management systems; educational technology; distance learning


Contributing organizations


Ministry reportingYes

Reporting Year2020

JUFO rating1


Last updated on 2024-03-04 at 20:26